Monday, November 11, 2019
What I learned from My year of fun and how you can do it
What I learned from My year of fun and how you can do it What I learned from My year of fun and how you can do it Iâve long considered myself a pretty serious person. I study serious things. I focus on helping workplaces tackle serious issues. And for the majority of my life Iâve been in pursuit of a serious kind of success: power, money, influence, impact. Starting and running your own business â" as much fun as it may look on Instagram â" is a serious endeavor.So after busting my butt for 5 years, and staying focused on growing my business, last January I set out on a different kind of mission: to make 2018 my own personal âYear of Fun.âI wanted to conduct a little experiment on myself: what would it look like to optimize for fun this year instead of focusing so much on success, money, or achievement? So each and every month I focused on cultivating a different element of fun, which perhaps Iâll write more about someday. But for now, I want to share with you the top breakthroughs I experienced â" because let me tell you, they shook me to my core.Itâs my hope that after hearing a bout my experience, youâll embark on your own Year of Fun in 2019, too! And for all of you who already purchased your 2019 LifeTracker Planners,, youâll notice that I made the pursuit of FUN a huge theme for the entire 2019 calendar year!1. Yes, you can plan for funBeing a fun-loving person is often associated with being spontaneous, a characteristic I most certainly do not embody. I used to think that there are just two kinds of people: carefree, fun-loving spontaneous folks, and serious people who lead more structured, productive, and focused lives. Talk about limited thinking! I used to think being fun and carefree just wasnât in the cards for me.But this yearâs experiment taught me that itâs not all that mutually-exclusive. You can, in fact, plan for more fun. Itâs simply an exercise in mindfulness.At the start of every month and week, I looked at the calendar in front of me and asked myself: whatâs on the docket just for fun?I added in weekly drum lessons, regular âgirls nightâ hangouts, and rendezvous with friends from far away when my work took me traveling. Instead of looking only to pack my schedule with productive time or business networking opportunities, I added in âjust for funâ days â" like hiking in Sequoia National Forestfollowing a speaking engagement in nearby Fresno, CA.And yes, while it is a total privilege to have such control over my schedule and the freedom to essentially create more leisure time, Iâd been squandering that privilege in years past. I suspect a lot of us donât recognize the power we have to pursue more fun in our day-to-day. According to Project Time Off,52% of American workers have vacation days that go unused. And I can relate! Iâd been so fixated on making ends meet or making sure my business was growing that I used to think, âI donât have the time to have fun!â When in reality, having more fun didnât really seem to draw from my bottom line much at all.2. More fun act ually made me more productiveThis year, I took more vacation time than ever before. And my business also performed better than ever before. We increased gross sales by over 15% this year, which is no small feat in a modestly-sized operation like mine.On top of sheer revenue, I tackled some of the biggest projects of my career this year. I finally finished the book Iâve been working on for the past 3 years. I launched my own independent podcast, which I absolutely LOVE producing. And on top of what Iâve tackled through Bossed Up this year, Brad and I also finished our first home renovation and bought our second house, marking the official start of our property management business.According to a growing body of research, happier workers are more productive and efficient. This is exactly the result I experienced in my year of fun, but Iâll admit: it took something of a leap of faith. When youâre worried about quarterly earnings being low, or have a huge looming deadlin e on the horizon, it can be really hard to give yourself permission to stop, put the work down, and make time for play.But time and again, when I allowed myself to have faith that fun time wasnât happening at the cost of work time, I was able to really enjoy myself during periods of rest and renewal and experience more focused, productive work hours afterwards.3. Intentionally making memories boosted my happinessLate last year, I read the latest book from two of my favorite cognitive scientists, Dan and Chip Heath. Their book, The Power of Moments: Why Certain Experiences Have Extraordinary Impact, made me realize that I hadnât previously put a lot of thought into how I celebrate traditions or mark milestones. Itâs actually one of the books that convinced me into having a wedding (as Iâd been previously leaning towards eloping.) In it, the Heath brothers make the case that a little bit of thoughtfulness can go a long way in elevating any moment into a once-in-a-lifetime memory.It inspired me to consider how I wanted to make once-in-a-lifetime memories this year, starting with spending some quality time with my mother to celebrate her 60th birthday. On something of a whim, we went in on a steeply-discounted package vacation deal from one of my favorite online adventure websites, TheClymb.com: an 8-day guided excursion back in my motherâs home country of Colombia.I knew this was going to be special because my mom never had the chance (a.k.a. never had the time or money) to return to Colombia since moving to the United States at the age of 13. Plus, it was my very first time seeing her home country myself! Her 60th birthday came around on Mar. 10, so my mom and I had most of the first quarter of 2018 to excitedly look forward to our trek, which was almost as much fun as heading off on it!We flew out on her birthday, spent a few days exploring Bogot, the capital city where my mother spent most of her childhood, before heading off on a 4-day trek thro ugh the jungle to ancient ruins in La Ciudad Perdida (The Lost City) in the Sierra Nevada Mountains near Santa Marta, a coastal beach town.I totally unplugged from work throughout our stay (being on a mountainside in the middle of the jungle made that easy), and we savored our time together. Upon return, I made my mom a video showcasing our time together, so we could look back and enjoy our experience all over again! It really felt like such an important bonding time for my mom and me, and now sheâs on a kick about making her birthday a time for a special trip every year! This coming March sheâs coming to Colorado to visit us in our new home and go hiking with us here.4. Cheap thrills count, too!Back when I was a kid, there was a class at summer camp called âStupid, But Fun,â in which you and the counselors would presumably hang out and come up with silly games and ways to entertain yourself. Being the already-quite-serious Posh Spice impersonator among my friends, I conside red this offering to be utterly ridiculous and anyone who signed up for it to be fully bonkers. But now at 31, I finally get that the dumb little ways you can delight yourself count for a lot!I started the year by dying my hair turquoise â" for no real reason other than I wanted to give it a go. I bought a moped â" which Iâm convinced is the most delightful mode of transportation on the planet, if a little impractical at times. Brad and I adopted a baby cockatiel and named him Tunafish (after our favorite Jurassic 5 rapper), having never even seen that breed of bird before.None of these moves made any goddamn sense, Iâll admit it. But they put more smiles on my face than I can begin to count!Throughout this year, I asked myself what my 7-year-old self would think of the life Iâm living these days, and made a few wacky moves to delight my inner child. Happiness scholar Gretchen Rubin says that the first step of having fun is to deeply understand whatâs fun for you. . A nd Iâd argue the next step is to not edit yourself! Thereâs this very grown-up thing we tend to do to our childhood quirks: we rationalize them, try to make sense of them, and have to have âgood reasonâ to indulge them.But bringing too much reason into this process really hampers the unbridled pursuit of fun â" especially stupid fun. Fun that doesnât make much sense. But let me tell you: cheap thrills count just as much as the bigger-ticket items when it comes to pursuing a life you feel reflect your values.5. What youâre aiming for mattersYou know that saying âAim for the moon and youâll land among the starsâ? Itâs a tad cliche, but holds some truth to it: the direction youâre heading in will absolutely influence where you end up. In the past, I wasnât pointing myself in a direction that focused on fun. I was doggedly pursuing business success, growth and learning, maximizing my impact in my community, and ensuring a stable financial foundation for my futur e. These are all good things, sure, but theyâre not all that fun.So without really thinking about it, I landed somewhere close to all those serious forms of success, without thinking about everyday delights.And you know what the consequences were? I was tired. I was feeling lonely. And I was limited in my view of what âself-careâ looked like.Turns out, having more fun can actually boost your energy, foster social bonds among friends and colleagues, and help buffer against stress. And after this year, which I can confidently say has been the most fun year of my life, I canât imagine living any other kind of way.What would a Year of Fun look like for YOU in 2019?I want to challenge you to bring more FUN into your new year. Really! I know weâre all a part of the Bossed Up community because weâve got big ambition. And I promise you that your big goals arenât any less important when we add on an element of FUN into our pursuits together. So starting right now, I want you to ask yourself, looking at your next week or next month: whatâs on the docket for FUN?And if you really want to make this an intentional practice throughout the course of 2019, snag yourself one of our 2019 LifeTracker Planners now and join me for 3 upcoming master classes on sustainable goal pursuit as well as quarterly accountability calls throughout the entire year. Weâre all focused on how we can thrive while we strive â" and have more FUN together in the year ahead!This article was originally published on BossedUp.
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